In many testing libraries it is possible to supply a custom message for a given expectation, this is currently not possible in Jest.
For example:
test('returns 2 when adding 1 and 1', () => {
expect(1 + 1, 'Woah this should be 2!').toBe(3);
});
This will throw the following error in Jest:
Expect takes at most one argument.
jest-expect-message
allows you to call expect
with a second argument of a String
message.
For example the same test as above:
test('returns 2 when adding 1 and 1', () => {
expect(1 + 1, 'Woah this should be 2!').toBe(3);
});
With jest-expect-message
this will fail with your custom error message:
● returns 2 when adding 1 and 1
Custom message:
Woah this should be 2!
expect(received).toBe(expected) // Object.is equality
Expected: 3
Received: 2
With npm:
npm install --save-dev jest-expect-message
With yarn:
yarn add -D jest-expect-message
Add jest-expect-message
to your Jest setupFilesAfterEnv
configuration.
See for help
"jest": {
"setupFilesAfterEnv": ["jest-expect-message"]
}
"jest": {
"setupTestFrameworkScriptFile": "jest-expect-message"
}
expect(actual, message)
actual
: The value you would normally pass into anexpect
to assert against with a given matcher.message
: String, the custom message you want to be printed should theexpect
fail.
test('returns 2 when adding 1 and 1', () => {
expect(1 + 1, 'Woah this should be 2!').toBe(3);
});
Matt Phillips 💻 📖 💡 🤔 🚇 |
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